Unpainted but mostly constructed figures! |
Finished unit of 8 Armoured Cossacks |
Front on view of Pancerni unit |
Close-up of the Pancerni Armoured Cossacks |
Typically I paint mounted units in batches of 6 figures at a time, I undercoat the horse with white acrylic paint, allow to dry. Then about 4 or 5 of the horses are painted in various shades of brown with the option to do the remainder as either a black horse or a grey.
Black horses are initially painted in a slate grey colour, whilst 'greys' I paint in a mid or light grey.
I then paint on black manes, tails and fetlocks (hoof up to mid shin or 'knees') on each horse - except for greys.
Close up of Officer, Musician and Banner bearer |
For greys, I will dry brush the whole horse in light grey and then white - depending on exact tone I'm looking for and then will do the main and tail in a darker grey or white, according to choice.
For black horses, water down some black paint into a 'strong wash' and then paint over the slate grey - this will give a good tonal variance and shading over the horses' body.
When all dry I add white socks to the horses, most have some form of white hair around each hoof, even if a thin line, be sparing on this. I also add various sized 'blazes' to horses' heads, again most horses have some sort of 'blaze'.
If you do a large 'blaze' that extends to the horses' muzzle then you should dry brush the muzzle with flesh colour.
Another Pancerni Commander |
Pancerni Commander, on horse with arguably outdated armour! |
Horses completed - then add the riders and they're done.
For the commanders I have two on smaller round bases and one on a large round base - you can guess where this is going - I have a total of 5 Pancerni 'Banners' (30 figures) that will be split 2 and 3 between the lesser commanders with the overall Pancerni commander on the large 'winged' horse.
Actually I now have 2 spare Pancerni figures, after doing this batch of eight, I can see my-self doing another 4 figures to give each commander 3 'banners' each!
Overall Pancerni Commander |
Another view, note attempt at leopard skin saddle cloth |
Given that no-one really knows how or why the Winged Hussars used their wings, or how they were attached etc - I'm claiming that they represent a noble rank or office...
From DaveD - Ooh they are nice -so nice i feel a minion top up - 120 points it is!
Nice work, Mike :)
ReplyDeleteJust a quick note on horse colours. If a brown horse has a lighter tail and mane, it is going to be a chestnut and won't have the black on the lower legs; the mane and tail are usually not much lighter (if at all) than the coat colour and can be very slightly darker.
Good tip Tasmin! - I'm no expert on horse colours. I have been doing what looks good. Will try and include your pointers in future horses I paint!
DeleteThere are some good guides to colours available online.
DeleteFor European stock, you'll probably have 60-70% as bays, 20-30% as chestnuts, then the remainder as blacks, greys (which includes a lot of white horses) and other oddities. The further east you go, you'll see more dun horses coming into the mix.
I’m loving this project of yours. These are great.
ReplyDeleteGreat looking cossacks, Mike!
ReplyDeleteSO COOL! Wow, there are some really, really cool troops from that period. I bet this all looks cool as hell on the table top! Great work.
ReplyDeleteNice looking unit and thanks for the horse painting tips - very helpful.
ReplyDeleteNice work!
ReplyDeleteVery eye-catching - great looking troops Mike
ReplyDeleteSplendid work. Mixing the figures is a good idea. Most people aren't the same height (or pose) in real life, so there is no reason not to have variety in our armies too.
ReplyDeleteLovely looking cavalry! An army I'm tempted by and this isn't helping!
ReplyDeleteBest Iain
Great stuff.
ReplyDelete